Emma Thompson and her sister Sophie faced a farmer spraying manure at them after they broke a court injunction to film a pastiche episode of the Great British Bake Off on a potential fracking site.

The sisters are taking part in a Frack Free Bake Off, complete with white marquee, vintage utensils and bunting, on a site leased by energy firm Cuadrilla as a protest against the plans.

Protesters are banned from the site, near Preston, after the company applied for an injunction in 2014, and the owner of the field hit out at the group on Wednesday afternoon.

Emma Thompson protests against fracking (Image: WENN.com)

Her sister Sophie got involved (Image: WENN.com)

The sisters are baking energy-themed cakes in a bespoke kitchen built by Greenpeace volunteers and powered by wood and solar panels, with Emma whipping up a wind turbine cake and Sophie baking a solar lemon cake.

Emma told the Press Association: "My sister has won celebrity Masterchef and is viciously competitive. She might have planned to do away with me while we are doing this.

"I have a feeling she's been up all night practising and I haven't been because I'm lazy."

Emma is very passionate (Image: WENN.com)

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She added she does not fancy her chances in the competition, saying: "I'm not a good baker, I don't have a great deal of skill so I'm fairly sure it won't go in my favour but we are all winning because we are protesting these fracking plans."

She continued: "I've been aware of this issue for a while with my work with Greenpeace and it came to a head for me when David Cameron went to the Paris Climate Conference and signed on to the protocol and then on the sly at Christmas, when nobody was looking, gave the nod to 200 fracking sites in Britain.

They have set up on the site near Preston (Image: WENN.com)

Rustling up some tasty treats (Image: WENN.com)

"It proved to me our Government is saying one thing and doing the opposite."

The sisters' efforts will be judged by cake shop owner Kate Styles, from near Blackpool.

The local community will be able to taste the cakes at a tea party after filming and people can cast their votes on Twitter to persuade the judge to pick their favourite.

Ms Styles said: "We are angry that we won't get the final say over whether there is fracking in our community or not.

They want the government to listen to locals (Image: WENN.com)

It has proven a tough task (Image: WENN.com)

"Local residents and their councillors have played by the rules of our planning and democratic process in rejecting Cuadrilla's drilling plan. The Government didn't like the outcome and appointed itself as the ultimate judge.

"It doesn't seem right that the only decision we will get to make is which is the best cake made on the site where Cuadrilla want to frack.

"But we are thrilled that Emma and Sophie Thompson have come here to support us."

The sisters show their support (Image: WENN.com)

Sophie has paired up with her sister (Image: WENN.com)

Cuadrilla's application to drill on the site was rejected by Lancashire County Council last year amid strong public opposition and was appealed by the company.

Communities and Local Government Secretary Greg Clark has announced he will have the final say on the application, with his decision expected in coming months.

Sophie said: "There's nothing like food to bring people together, and nothing like fracking to pull them apart. For years, to oppose fracking, this community has played by the rules of our democracy.

"Yet the Government has rigged the competition undemocratically to favour the fracking industry. If our Government energy policy were a cake, it would probably be a crossover between a crumble and an Eton mess."

* The full episode of Frack Free Bake Off will be released on April 28 at 12pm